Ph.D.,
United States History, Minors: Latin American History, American Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, December
1995; Dissertation: "Who Wears the Pants? Women, Dress Reform, and
Power in the Mid-Nineteenth-Century United States"

"Long
Hair: Students, Politics, and Power, 1964-1969." In The High
School Age: Youth Culture and the American High School. Ronald Cohen,
Alexander Urbiel, and Scott Walter, eds. (Forthcoming: Teacher's College Press,
2002)

"National
Identities," a photo and historiographical essay for the World
History Resource Center (online), Gale Group, Fall 2000.

"Cross-Dressing
But Not Passing," Purple Ink, Foreign Paper (Forthcoming:
University of Tennessee Press).

“From
Fashionable Students to Dowdy Professors:Femininity and Education, Yesterday and Today,” AAUW-MA and Salem State College
Symposium, April 28, 2001.

Moderator/Commentator,
"Men, Women, and the Negotiation of Religious Authority," Second
Annual Graduate Symposium on Women's and Gender History, University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, March 22-24, 2001.